Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Village People

I apologize for not emailing yall sooner. I’ve kept meaning to, but I’m pretty busy. I generally don’t leave school until 10 or 11 at night, and even when I leave, I generally go out to a street-side Shishkabob place and spend another hour or two eating and reading some Chinese political science articles for class.
But that’s for another article. As for news, the biggest thing that has happened is that I got interviewed by the Amatuer Traveler podcast. For those of yall who don’t know, a podcast is kind of like a radio broadcast, but you can do it on your own and you just put it online for people to download. I’ve listened to the Amatuer Traveler podcast for over a year, and I contacted the host to see if I could help him out with anything in China. He asked me to come on the show and talk about Beijing as an independent traveler. So, for those of yall who want to hear what I’ve got to say about Beijing, check it out:
http://amateurtraveler.com/
Click on the above link and then look for my picture and the words “Independent Travel to Beijing, China – Episode 193. Just above the word “podcast,” you can see a play button. Press that, and the program will start up. (Let me know if yall have any issues with this). It’s a pretty big show, getting about four to five thousand downloads a week.
And now for something completely different: this Saturday, I went to my friend’s house and hung out in his village for the weekend. His village is on the northern part of the Shandong peninsula (I live on the southern part of the peninsula). I took a crappy bus made by a company called Iveco (combining the reliability of Russian engineering with everything you love about the “Made in China” brand). After about five hours of bumping across Shandong, I arrived at my friend’s village.
I’ve been to Chinese villages before. In January 2007, I went to a different friend’s village on the border of Yunnan and Guizhou province, in some of the poorest areas of China. I’ve also been to a village outside of Beijing, where my host family owns a vacation home, a richer locale. Each area I’ve been to was pretty different, and this one was no exception: it was not really a village, instead it was more like a series of small factories mixed with farming communities.
When you think of the word ‘village,’ you probably imagine huts made out of mud with straw roofs. There is some of that in China, but not much where I was. My friend was from the poorest village in the area, so it was more like that than any of the other areas. Most of the houses in his village were built with bricks made in a factory just outside the village. The inside of the house was all tiles and concrete. In the center of the house, like most other village houses throughout China, is a roofless courtyard. The rooms of the house are arranged around this courtyard, a little garage, three bedrooms, a kitchen and a living room. In one of the corners of the courtyard, there is a cocker spaniel and a couple of birds in cages. I’m putting pictures of the place online.
This village is the poorest in the area, that’s because they don’t have many factories in their village. Nearby this village is a defunct brick factory and a small plastics factory. Surrounding the village is farmland, with corn, peanuts and their most famous product, strawberries.
I’m not sure how long this can continue though. The pollution is starting to have a real effect. The creek that separates this village from a neighboring village is completely black. Trash is piling up on both sides and the banks are the local dump. I saw some ducks were bathing in the black creek, and I told my friend that we had better not be having duck for dinner. My friend said “It used to not be a problem, but in the last 10 years pollution has become a really noticeable problem.” Really? The pollution is beginning seep into the aquifer so that the water from wells is undrinkable.
The other villages in the areas are a lot richer and a lot less traditional than my friend’s. Most have a couple of factories, and much more modern houses, i.e. not made of bricks. One of the villages nearby is one of the richest in all of China. It has almost 10 big factories. As far as villages go, this place is in the money. They have their own mall and their own stadium and they are one of the only villages in China with a KFC (that’s a huge honor. In this country, KFC is where you take your hot date when you’re getting to know her).
Hanging out in the villages was a lot of fun, giving me a chance to relax. The pace is real laid-back. I enjoyed it a lot and I may get to do a lot more of it later depending on where I do my internship next spring. I’ll keep yall informed.
Here are those pictures:
http://picasaweb.google.com/agenbite.lee
I’ll try and send emails more frequently as I’m finishing up my program in Qingdao.

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